I am working on a responsive design site that has a text block with an imbedded image with a negative left wrap value. (I want the text to overlay a light gradient area of the image.)

As I work down toward iPhone-resolution width breakpoints, I reduce the font size and adjust the image size. I have noticed a very pronounced tendency tor the image frame to become displaced from the underlying image.

I have tried lots of ways of jogging the frame's relation to the underlying image, including shifting the wrap values, cutting and repasting the image, opening and closing the page... So far, no joy.

This seems to be part of a general pattern of Muse graphics becoming displaced from their frames.

This is just happening, because text wrap does not work properly with responsiveness.

As far as I experienced you should copy your text with the wrapped picture, hide this misplacing text in your mobile breakpoint, and use the copy of it and set it up as you need it. Of course you should hide this copy in other breakpoints.

If I missed something Günter Heißenbüttel, I invite you to this – you are the text guru, for me at least .

Thanks for the suggestion, Fotoroeder. I'll use the technique if I have to, but it would result in a lot of extra layers, since I use a lot of breakpoints. I'd like to find some way to get this to work.

I should have added that I am using Copy size and position from a finished breakpoint to the next smaller breakpoint. This rough positions the content, which I then tweak. The frame displacement seems to get weirder and weirder that way.

In general, I have opted for separate text and image placement, since image inclusion in text has seemed problematic. I decided to try it again on this page, since there is only one image and one main text block. It seemed a good time to test and see if the technique can be made to work at all.

Here's a link to the Dropbox folder with the peccant .muse file. I haven't used this Copy Dropbox Link command before, so if there is any additional security stuff I need to do so people can access the file, let me know. The breakpoint at 680 px shows maximum displacement.

Late-breaking news: You know how when you go to the doctor, what is ailing you magically heals?

I closed the working version of this site after making a duplicate to strip down and then upload to Dropbox. I just re-opened the working version, and the displacement has disappeared. So...whatever is going wrong is fixed by closing and reopening the .muse file. Not a pretty fix, but better than none.

Even later-breaking news: I just duplicated the text block containing the image because I wanted to adjust the wrap value. The displaced frame reappeared in the duplicate layer. This is getting too weird– probably a case of possession by evil spirits. I'll stop posting until the Adobe-folk have had a chance to look at the .muse file.

I just opened the .muse file in the Dropbox whose link I posted. I opened the page CA_CW reviews and went to breakpoint 680 and selected the text block. I then selected the image of the soldier within that block and recreated the displaced frame. Here's what it looked like:

Nothing in the world more gratifying than reproducing a bug. (I say this as an old Lingo programmer.)

I'll use the copy, cut, replace procedure if the problem crops up again. And avoid tugging inline images downward.

I have to say, the proposed workaround makes me a bit nervous, since I don't have a firm grip on Muse's OOP architecture. Specifically, I'm not clear on the effects of cutting and pasting objects that are displayed in other breakpoints (and have labor invested in their size and placement). I've been fooled a few times in my expectations. Is there any discussion of this I could refer to?

While I've got you here, an idea for a new feature: collapsible paragraph style folders. The more familiar I get with responsive design, the more size-dependent style variations I want to employ. Be nice to be able to stow away style "clusters" not currently in use.